Tuesday, January 14, 2025

The Met: Henry R. Luce Center For The Study of American Art

The Luce Center does for American art what the Greek and Roman Study Center does for classical art: it stores a lot of things not on permanent display, but in a mode accessible and well-cataloged and well-described. The Center is immense: the Met itself is immense because of its relative youth and situation in Central Park. Imagine, all the spare parts are under the same roof...

Helpful map
Some of the silver

Plates, bowls

Aisle after aisle of all these things



How to make a Tiffany lamp


Paintings

Chests

More paintings...in the portraits division...note the screen whereby
you can identify pieces, read descriptions...

Frames

More paintings

Including a Mary Cassatt

A Benjamin West

Elliot portrait of Mathew Brady...1857...before he became
really famous

Glass...evidently I was overwhelmed, wandering aimlessly...

Another Bierstadt...

OBF

Chairs dept.






Overcome, we retreated to the roof-top cafe for a sunset view


The Met: American Wing

We did the Met's American Wing over the course of several days...it's a bit spread out, and, as one might expect, it is quite large. Many rooms of OBF (old brown furniture), some as nice as our Statton bedroom suite (can be yours, $4k OBO), but much else too, some historic. As usual, we were drawn mostly to the paintings.

Beautiful Tiffany windows here and there (some already
posted)

"Period" rooms all over the wing, but this Frank Lloyd Wright great
room was the prize catch

The great whatever outside the American wing

Blown and molded glass on one of the terraces

Whistler, Portrait of Theodore Duret

St. Gaudens, Bob Louie (Stevenson; very distant relative on Vicki's
side...)

John Singer Sargent, The Wyndham Sisters, 1899 (three-fer)

Sargent, Lady with the Rose, 1882
Francis William Edmonds, Taking the Census, 1854



Francis William Edmonds, The New Bonnet, 1858
Enoch Wood Perry, The True American, 1874 (a study in the willful
ignorance of the Reconstruction era; it said)


Unknown, Moving Day (in Little Old New York), 1827; from the Colonial
period through the 19th century, leases expired on May 1st, a day of
bedlam as entire households and businesses moved....

Frederick Edwin Church, The Parthenon, 1871


Emanuel Leutze, Washington Crossing the Delaware, 1851; muy famoso

Church, Heart of the Andes, 1859

Albert Bierstadt, The Matterhorn

Bierstadt, The Rocky Mountains, Lander's Peak, 1863



John Trumbull, Alexander Hamilton, 1792

Gilbert Stewart, George Washington, mid-1790s

Samuel F. B. Morse (yes, that Morse), Portrait of Susan
Walker Morse
(his daughter), 1837


Only in America

Miniaturist's kit

OBF

More OBF

Easy Chair, Caleb Gardiner, upholsterer, Rhode Island,
late 18th

High Chest, enameled, Boston, mid-18th


















































































































































































































































More period rooms

More OBF

Thursday, January 2, 2025

National Museum Of The American Indian

Our day on the southern-most bit of the island included a visit to the National Museum of the American Indian, located in the glorious old beaux arts Alexander Hamilton Customs House building...another case where the building itself nearly over-shadows the collection.




Central rotunda, cupola...elliptical


Adorned by numerous customs house-themed murals





The National Museum of the American Indian, administered by the
Smithsonian Institution, has two sites...the newer, larger one in DC, 
and this, the smaller, older site in NYC 








Feather dancing skirt

As with the DC site, the museum here had relatively few
items from the dozen Montana nations, with whom I had
more than a passing acquaintance during my years there


A kindly guard noticed our interest in the building and let us
snap a few more interior shots


One of the grand staircases